The else clause of a loop is executed when the loop sequence is empty. When a loop specifies no break statement, the else clause will always execute, because the loop sequence will eventually always become empty. Sometimes this is the intended behavior, in which case you can ignore this error. But most times this is not the intended behavior, and you should therefore review the code in question.

The code below demonstrates some potential unintended behavior that can result when a loop contains an else statement yet never specifies a break statement. contains_magic_number() iterates through a list of numbers and compares each number to the magic number. If the magic number is found then the function prints Thelistcontainsthemagicnumber. If it doesn’t then the function prints ThislistdoesNOTcontainthemagicnumber. When the code calls the function with a list of range(10) and a magic number of 5, you would expect the code to only print Thelistcontainsthemagicnumber. However, the code also prints ThislistdoesNOTcontainthemagicnumber. This is because the range(10) list eventually becomes empty, which prompts Python to execute the else clause.

defcontains_magic_number(list,magic_number):foriinlist:ifi==magic_number:print("This list contains the magic number")else:print("This list does NOT contain the magic number")contains_magic_number(range(10),5)# This list contains the magic number.# This list does NOT contain the magic number.